Online Encyclopedia

ANDREW II

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 972 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ANDREW II  . (1175-1235), king of Hungary, son of Bela III., king of Hungary, succeeded his
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nephew, the infant Ladislaus III., in 1205 . No other Magyar king, perhaps, was so mischievous to his country . Valiant, enterprising, pious as he was, all these
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fine qualities were ruined by a reckless good nature which never thought of the morrow . He declares in one of his decrees that the generosity of a king should be limitless, and he acted up tothis principle throughout his reign . He gave away everything.
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money, villages, domains, whole counties, to the utter impoverishment of the
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treasury, thereby rendering the
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crown, for the first time in Hungarian
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history, dependent upon the
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great feudatories, who, in Hungary as elsewhere, took all they could get and gave as little as possible in return . In all matters of government, Andrew was equally reckless and haphazard . He is directly responsible for the beginnings of the feudal anarchy which well-nigh led to the extinction of the monarchy at the end of the 13th century . The great feudatories did not even respect the lives of the royal
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family, for Andrew was recalled from a futile attempt to reconquer Galicia (which really
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lay beyond the Hungarian sphere of influence), through the
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murder of his first wife Gertrude of
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Meran (September 24, 1213), by rebellious nobles jealous of the influence of her relatives . In 1215 he married Iolanthe of France, but in 1217 was compelled by the pope to lead a crusade to the
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Holy
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Land, which he undertook in hopes of being elected Latin emperor of Constantinople . The crusade excited no
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enthusiasm in Hungary, but Andrew contrived to collect 15,000 men together, whom he led to Venice; whence, not without much haggling and the surrender of all the Hungarian claims upon Zara, about two-thirds of them were conveyed to Acre . But the whole expedition was a forlorn hope .

The

Christian
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kingdom of
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Palestine was by this time reduced to a
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strip of coast about 440 sq. m. in extent, and after a
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drawn
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battle with the
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Turks on the Jordan (November ro), and fruitless assaults on the fortresses of the Lebanon and on Mount
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Tabor, Andrew started home (
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January 18, 1218) through
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Antioch, Iconium, Constantinople and Bulgaria . On his return he found the feudal barons in the ascendant, and they extorted from him the
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Golden Bull (see HUNGARY, History) . Andrew's last exploit was to defeat an invasion of Frederick of Austria in 1234 . The same
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year he married his third wife,
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Beatrice of Este . Besides his three sons, Bela, Coloman and Andrew, Andrew had a daughter Iolanthe, who married the king of Aragon . He was also the
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father of St Elizabeth of Hungary . No
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special monograph for the whole reign exists, but there is a good description of Andrew's crusade in Reinhold Roehricht, Geschichte
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des Konigreiches Jerusalem (
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Innsbruck, 1898) . The best account of Andrew's government is in L2sz16 Szal ay'sHistory of Hungary (Hung.) , vol. i . (
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Leipzig and Pest, 1851-1862) . (R . N .

End of Article: ANDREW II
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